Click Step-Growth Polymerization and E/Z Stereochemistry Using Nucleophilic Thiol–yne/–ene Reactions: Applying Old Concepts for Practical Sustainable (Bio)Materials

Conspectus Polymer sustainability is synonymous with “bioderived polymers” and the zeitgeist of “using renewable feedstocks”. However, this sentiment does not adequately encompass the requirements of sustainability in polymers. In addition to recycling considerations and mechanical performance, following green chemistry principles also needs to be maximized to improve the sustainability of polymer synthesis. The synthetic cost (i.e., maximizing atom economy, reducing chemical hazards, and lowering energy requirements) of producing polymers should be viewed as equally important to the monomer source (biomass vs petrol platform chemicals). Therefore, combining the use of renewable feedstocks with efficient syntheses and green chemistry principles is imperative to delivering truly sustainable polymers. The high efficiency, atom economy, and single reaction trajectories that define click chemistry reactions position them as ideal chemical approaches to synthesize polymers in a sustainable manner while simultaneously expanding the structural scope of accessible polymers from sustainably sourced chemicals. Click step-growth polymerization using the thiol–yne Michael addition, a reaction first reported over a century ago, has emerged as an extremely mild and atom-efficient pathway to yield high-performance polymers with controllable E/Z stereochemistry along the polymer backbone. Building on studies of aromatic thiol–yne polymers, around 10 years ago our group began investigating the thiol–yne reaction for the stereocontrolled synthesis of alkene-containing aliphatic polyesters. Our early studies established a convenient path to high-molecular-weight (>100 kDa) E-rich or Z-rich step-growth polymers by judiciously changing the catalyst and/or reaction solvent. This method has since been adapted to synthesize fast-degrading polyesters, high-performance polyamides, and resilient hydrogel biomaterials. Across several systems, we have observed dramatic differences in material properties among polymers with different alkene stereochemistry. We have also explored the analogous thiol–ene Michael reaction to create high-performance poly(ester-urethanes) with precise E/Z stereochemistry. In contrast to the stereoselective thiol–yne polymerization, here the use of monomers with predefined E/Z (geometric) isomerism (arising from either alkenes or the planar rigidity of ring units) affords polymers with total control over stereochemistry. This advancement has enabled the synthesis of tough, degradable materials that are derived from sustainable monomer feedstocks. Employing isomers of sugar-derived isohexides, bicyclic rigid-rings possessing geometric isomerism, led to degradable polymers with fundamentally opposing mechanical behavior (i.e., plastic vs elastic) simply by adjusting the stereochemistry of the isohexide. In this Account, we feature our investigation of thiol–yne/–ene click step-growth polymers and efforts to establish structure–property relationships toward degradable materials with practical mechanical performance in the context of sustainable polymers and/or biomaterials. We have paid attention to installing and controlling geometric isomerism by using these click reactions, an overarching objective of our work in this research area. The exquisite control of geometric isomerism that is possible within polymer backbones, as enabled by convenient click chemistry reactions, showcases a powerful approach to creating multipurpose degradable polymers.

Typically, polymers are synthesized through either step-growth or chain-growth mechanisms, both of which present limitations in the context of creating more sustainable plastics. While stepgrowth polymerization readily enables the introduction of heteroatoms into polymer backbones, which is important for recycling and performance considerations, the requirement for high-temperature (>200°C) polycondensation for most leading polymers in this class means that the process is energy-intensive. On the other hand, most commercial chain-growth polymerizations typically occur at lower temperatures and are thus more energy-efficient. However, it is challenging to incorporate heteroatoms into the polymer backbones, without compromising the molar mass, mechanical properties, or uniform degradability of the materials. Recent advances in step-growth polymerizations have focused on replacing condensation reactions with low-temperature click chemistries. 5 These reactions can offer advantages such as high efficiency to yield high-molar-mass polymers, orthogonality to enable the facile synthesis of functional materials, and, in some cases, rapid ambient temperature reactivity that lowers the energy demands of the process. Modern click step-growth polymerizations, including 1,3-dipolar cycloadditions, 6−9 thiol/amino-epoxy reactions, 10,11 sulfur(VI) fluoride exchange (SuFEx), 12,13 nucleophilic aromatic substitution (S N Ar), 14,15 and oxime formation 16 demonstrate an array of methodologies by which to efficiently build polymers under mild conditions. When our group became interested in using click chemistry to build polymers in the late 2000s, we were intrigued by conjugate addition reactions of nucleophiles to unsaturated moieties. At the time, the wider field was dominated by use of the radicalmediated thiol−ene reaction, 17,18 which remains a powerful state-of-the-art technique in polymer synthesis and functionalization ( Figure 1). Although the application of the analogous radical thiol−yne reaction 18−22 in polymers was also developing, the radical thiol addition can lack regio-and/or stereocontrol 23,24 and lead to unwanted side products. 24 Moreover, two consecutive thiol additions across the alkyne may also occur to yield a thioacetal product, which was particularly advantageous for forming dendritic 19−22 or cross-linked 12 materials ( Figure 1). While we had explored the base-catalyzed conjugate addition of thiols across activated double bonds (adjacent to an electron-withdrawing group) for polymer synthesis and endgroup or side-chain functionalization, 25−29 the analogous strategy using electron-deficient triple bonds was less studied ( Figure 1).
However, the base-catalyzed thiol−yne Michael addition, 30 first reported more than 100 years prior, was key to enabling us to adapt thiol−yne chemistry to achieve our goals by favoring a regio-and stereocontrolled single addition to a triple bond that would yield an unsaturated product. Specifically, we anticipated a versatile method to create structurally diverse heteroatom-rich polymers with controllable E/Z isomerism ( Figure 1).
The E/Z stereochemistry of thiol−yne Michael addition products was not investigated until the 1950s by Truce and coworkers. 31−33 When employing thiolates in protic media, the anti-addition rule predominated to yield Z-isomer products. A more decisive study by the same group in the 1970s investigated the effect of electron-withdrawing groups (ester, amide, nitrile, etc.). 34 Again, for most of the substrates the thiolate addition in protic media proceeded via nucleophilic attack at the β-carbon to generate a Z-anion followed by rapid protonation of the αcarbon to yield 100% Z-products (pathway I, Scheme 1). However, reactions employing substrates with carbonylcontaining activating groups, such as propiolates, violated this rule to yield products with mixed stereochemistry (resulting from both syn-and anti-additions) (pathway II, Scheme 1). The authors speculated that this was due to the formation of an allenolate intermediate which could facilitate isomerization. Although this study reported quantitative yields when employing stoichiometric thiolates, procedures that featured catalytic amounts of base (such as triethylamine, NEt 3 ) were not as efficient.
Subsequent work in the following decades generally supported these historic findings where the anti-addition rule favored Z-products, especially in protic or highly polar solvents. 35−39 Similarly, these studies also generally showed that acetylenes featuring electron-withdrawing groups that could stabilize the negative charge of the anionic intermediates were less Z-selective. In some cases, the use of these highly activated acetylenes even led to quantitative conversion at ambient temperature when using only a catalytic amount of base. 35,37,39 Solvent effects on stereoselectivity were also described in these studies with the proton-donating ability of the solvent being important. Protic solvents can rapidly protonate the kinetic Zanion (Scheme 1), while equilibration of the allenolate intermediate to the more thermodynamically stable product (greater E-selectivity) may occur when using nonpolar aprotic solvents. These principles would serve to influence our initial work in adapting the reaction to polymer synthesis.
Our work in utilizing the base-catalyzed nucleophilic thiol− yne reaction for the stereocontrolled synthesis of unsaturated polymers began in 2013 with our report on the chain−chain coupling between propiolate-and thiol-terminated small molecules and PEG oligomers. 40 In that work, we established the high efficiency and stereoselectivity of the reaction. We found that catalytic amounts of a commercial amine (such as NEt 3 ) or amidine (such as 1,8-diazabicyclo [5.4.0]undec-7-ene (DBU)) led to the quantitative formation of α,β-unsaturated products with opposing stereochemistry. When reactions were conducted in chloroform, the use of afforded E-isomer products (up to 97%) and the analogous reactions with DBU led to high Z-content (up to 80%). This result was striking and not entirely explained by historic mechanistic interpretations. (See Scheme 1 and the accompanying discussion.) A cohesive mechanistic description for the catalyst effect on stereoselectivity remains unknown. We also found that the solvent choice was also critical to the stereochemistry and kinetics of the thiol−yne addition, in accordance with previous reports. 37 High dielectric solvents increased the reaction rate and promoted Z-isomer products, but less-polar solvents were more sluggish, yet still efficient (<1 h of reaction time), and favored E-isomer product formation. Concurrent optimization of both solvent and catalyst allowed for the targeted synthesis of both E-and Z-isomers with very high selectivity (>98%).
By applying these observations, we anticipated a path to highmolecular-weight unsaturated polyesters with controllable stereochemistry. Most importantly, the operational simplicity of the reaction was apparent. The base-catalyzed thiol−yne additions are tolerant of wet solvents and oxygen, which allows for benchtop reactions in the open atmosphere. Together, the accessibility that these features makes the practical application of the thiol−yne reaction highly attractive to a range of stakeholders.

STEREOCONTROLLED THIOL−YNE REACTIONS FOR STEP-GROWTH POLYMERS
Stereochemistry is an essential aspect of molecular function and is equally impactful to the properties of polymers. 41 The control of chirality, or tacticity, of pendant groups in polymer chains has been used to great effect to manipulate and enhance the thermomechanical performance of commercially important modern plastics, with notable examples including isotactic polypropylene and poly(lactic acid). 41 Conversely, installing and/or controlling E/Z isomerism in synthetic polymers is   46 which can imbue the resultant polymers with thermoplastic elastomeric behavior. The distinctive behavior between isomeric polyisoprenes inspired our group's interest in E/Z-alkene isomerism in polymers. In the early 2010s, the majority of the stereocontrolled unsaturated synthetic polymers possessed all-carbon backbones (e.g., polybutadiene, polyneoprene, and polynorbornene) and were usually synthesized via metal-catalyzed chaingrowth mechanisms, although some unsaturated step-growth polymers synthesized from inefficient polycondensation reactions were also known. 41 Thus, we viewed the manipulation of double-bond stereochemistry in unsaturated polymers as an underdeveloped area. Specifically, there was an opportunity to develop alkene-containing polar polymers (i.e., polyesters) using click step-growth polymerizations. This would provide a strategic advantage over inefficient polycondensations that necessitate harsh reaction conditions, which typically result in the isomerization of double bonds, thus limiting the stereochemical control within unsaturated polymers.
Notably, work in the late 1980s reported several basecatalyzed thiol−yne polymerizations using thiophenols and aromatic ynones, although their poor solubility generally precluded in-depth characterization. 47−49 In 2010, Tang and co-workers also reported an amine-catalyzed thiol−yne polymerization of bisthiophenols and aromatic dipropiolates to yield unsaturated step-growth polymers with moderate molar mass (M W = 30 kDa) and high Z-content (up to 80%). 50 While these studies had an exclusive focus on aromatic polymers, we anticipated that the aliphatic polymers would have superior processability, mechanical performance, and degradability, all of which are important metrics to consider in the context of sustainable polymers. A rhodium-catalyzed stereoselective thiol−yne polymerization to afford aromatic polymers was reported in 2011; 51 however, a full investigation of stereochemistry−property effects was not conducted. Instead, we sought to employ organocatalysts for the same purpose and fully exploit the stereocontrol of the reaction to modulate polymer thermomechanical properties.
In 2016, we published a study on the synthesis of stereocontrolled thiol−yne polyesters from aliphatic dipropiolates and commercially available dithiols. 1 Polymers with high molar mass (M W > 100 kDa) were synthesized at ambient temperature in just 1 h using 1 mol % catalyst loading (NEt 3 or DBU) which corroborated the click-like nature of the reaction. Studying a system synthesized from propane-1,3-diyl dipropiolate (C 3EA ) and 1,6-hexanedithiol (C 6T ) yielded polymers with interesting mechanical properties, and initial studies into the effect of E/Z stereochemistry on mechanical properties were further investigated using this composition. When various catalyst/solvent combinations (chloroform and/or dimethylformamide) were used, the stereochemistry was changed from 32 to 80% Z-content. Although all of the C 3EA −C 6T polyesters could be broadly characterized as thermoplastic elastomers with distinct yield points, there were stark stereochemical differences among their behavior ( Figure 2).
Polymers with Z-content ≥70% were semicrystalline and extremely tough (1500% elongation at break and ultimate tensile strength near 60 MPa for 80% Z polymers). On the other hand, polymers with 32 and 53% Z-content were amorphous and more extensible, but at the cost of decreased tensile strength and Young's modulus (an order of magnitude lower). These mechanical behaviors remained consistent even when the polymer molecular weight and/or dispersity (Đ M ) varied. The stereochemistry−property relationship (E is weaker and amorphous, Z is tougher and semicrystalline) was surprising and at odds with polyisoprene data, where E-isomer polymers are stronger and more crystalline. Infrequently, we have reached 15−90% Z content in related polymers, but we have not observed significant differences in the thermomechanical− property relationships previously described for materials containing 30−80% Z isomers. The highly selective reaction trajectory of the nucleophilic thiol−yne addition also enabled us to control other material properties through judicious monomer design and end-group modification. The surface properties of the materials can be modified independently from the bulk properties by introducing 1,4-dithiothreitol (DTT) as a comonomer ( Figure 3). Even at loadings of as low as 10% of the thiol comonomer content, the polar component of the surface energy was observed to be significantly reduced, while the mechanical properties did not change significantly. Attempts to modify the double bond by either subsequent thiol addition or other chemical reactions have largely led to rapid polymer degradation. Despite this, cross-linking with 1 wt % dicumyl peroxide at 160°C in the bulk led to materials that displayed a reduced ultimate tensile strength but greater elastic recovery. Typically, we use a slight excess of dipropiolate monomer in these polymerizations to control the molar mass of the final polymer through stoichiometric imbalance (following the modified Carother equation). We believe that this approach provides the most stable end-group as there is a risk of disulfide formation or further reaction of thiol end-groups. In turn, this presents the opportunity to selectively functionalize the end-groups of these high-molar-mass polymers through a targeted addition, demonstrated with 2,2,2-trifluoroethanethiol ( Figure 4).
Further attempts to create materials with additional functional groups focused on the incorporation of an internal unactivated alkyne between the propiolate reactive groups. 52,53 As anticipated, this did not interfere with the polymerization process but instead provided a handle that could be either selectively functionalized or cross-linked through Ru-catalyzed alkyne−azide cycloaddition chemistry. Finally, in order to create a noncovalent network through hydrogen bonding in the materials, a dipropiolate monomer that contained urethane linkages was created and polymerized. 54 While stereochemical effects on the mechanical performance were still clear, the hydrogen bonding led to strong elastomers at high Z-contents and the materials possessed thermally stimulated shape memory behavior (recovery of their original shape after deformation).
Our attempts to directly functionalize the backbone alkenes of various thiol−yne polyesters (e.g., C 3EA −C 6T ) using radical and/ or nucleophilic additions have been largely unsuccessful. We typically observed a large decrease in the molecular weight of the polymer, indicative of backbone degradation. Despite these observations, the thiol−yne polyesters were found to be highly resistant to hydrolysis under basic conditions. Indeed, unpublished data from our laboratory indicates that these polymers have exceptional hydrolytic stability (<1% mass loss after 1 year in strongly alkaline solution).
We became interested in increasing the hydrolytic degradability of the thiol−yne polyesters to further the materials from both sustainable polymers and biomaterials angles. This led us to further explore copolymer formulations that incorporated an aliphatic ester which would be expected to increase the hydrolytic degradability of the polymers ( Figure 5). 52 There are numerous commercial dithiols yet most are simple aliphatic and hydrocarbon-based. Thus we synthesized hydrolytically labile dithiol by esterifying succinic acid with 3-mercaptopropanol. Due to the operational simplicity of the thiol−yne polymerization, polymers of C 3EA −C 6T composition were systematically produced to include succinate units (0−100%) by altering the stoichiometry of the two distinct dithiol monomers. As anticipated, the degradation kinetics were positively correlated to succinate content (70% mass loss after 10 days in strong alkaline solution). The in vitro degradation proceeded via a surface erosion process to afford linear degradation profiles. This behavior was translated to in vivo

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Article studies to reveal a fully resorbable biomaterial with minimal inflammatory and cytotoxicity response markers. Simultaneously, the stereochemistry of the polymers could be controlled by adjusting the reaction conditions. Hence, we could independently tune the degradability and mechanical properties by combining compositional and stereochemical control (i.e., one can produce two materials with similar mechanical strength but different degradation rates or vice versa). This addressed a longstanding challenge in polymer biomaterials (and degradable polymers, more generally speaking): the inability to decouple degradability from mechanical properties. Previously, this concept had been demonstrated only in hydrogels, which are swollen and highly cross-linked polymer networks. 55,56 The importance of this feature lies in the fact that biomaterials need to be exquisitely tailored to the wide range of mechanical requirements found in biological tissues, and the biomaterial residence time in vivo needs to be equally harmonized.
Pivoting from polyesters, we explored the nucleophilic thiol− yne polymerization to synthesize high-molar-mass (>100 kDa) and high-T g (up to approximately 100°C) polyamide thermoplastics ( Figure 6). 2 We initially screened the DBUcatalyzed (1 mol %) reaction of an analogous three-carbon dipropiolamide (C 3AA ) with C 6T in dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) to afford 73% Z polyamides. The Z-selectivity could be increased to 82% when using DMSO/methanol solvent mixtures. However, obtaining high-E polyamides was more challenging since E-isomers are favored with weaker bases in nonpolar solvents for the thiol−yne reaction. NEt 3 was found to be a poor catalyst for the propiolamide-thiol addition, and DMSO, which is a highly polar solvent, was found to be necessary to ensure good polymer solubility. However, by employing 1,4-diazabicyclo[2.2.2]octane (DABCO) at higher loadings (10 mol %) and adding chloroform as a co-solvent, we could isolate highmolar-mass polymers with 35% Z-selectivity. Interestingly, all of the melt-pressed thiol−yne polyamides were amorphous regardless of stereochemistry. This was unexpected considering the high degree of crystallinity that is typically observed in other synthetic polyamides such as nylons. Nevertheless, there was still

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pubs.acs.org/accounts Article a clear stereochemistry−property relationship. Generally, the high-Z polymers had a greater T g (Δ = 14−15°C) and Young's modulus (∼20% higher), but at the cost of reduced ductility.
In this case, their amorphous nature was advantageous since it imbued the polyamides with a high degree of processability as compared to semicrystalline nylons that possess comparable mechanical profiles. Above all, the most interesting feature was their high-fidelity shape memory behavior and elasticity, which we serendipitously discovered when physically manipulating the polymer films into different shapes at various temperatures. Due to their excellent processability and physical adaptability coupled with their outstanding mechanical strength, we pursued the polyamides as nonresorbable (nonbiodegradable) biomaterials and found excellent long-term stability and compatibility in vivo.

THIOL−YNE HYDROGEL MATERIALS
In the early 2010s, the use of click chemistry to make network polymers, including hydrogels, was expanding. At the time, the nucleophilic thiol−ene reaction using various Michael acceptors (including maleimide, vinyl sulfones, and acrylates) was already established as a mild and efficient method to synthesize hydrogel materials. 57 However, the analogous nucleophilic thiol−yne reaction was yet to be investigated in this context. We envisioned that the thiol−yne reaction would be excellently suited for hydrogel synthesis as both functional groups were tolerant of water and due to the high efficiency of uncatalyzed reactions in buffered (pH > 7) aqueous media, 39 including our 2013 report. 40 In 2015, we demonstrated the application of orthogonal thiol−yne Michael and inverse electron-demand Diels−Alder additions in PBS (pH = 7.4) to afford dual-network hydrogels with outstanding strength (compressive stresses of 14 to 15 MPa at 98% compression). Importantly, both reactions were bioorthogonal, which allowed for the encapsulation of cells within the hydrogel matrix when the synthesis was conducted in cell culture media.
In order to simplify the design of robust hydrogels, we thoroughly examined single network materials that were based solely on nucleophilic thiol−yne cross-linking. 58 A library of gels were constructed from combinations of multi-armed (twoarmed vs three-armed vs four-armed) PEG-modified propiolates and thiols which were synthesized using acid-catalyzed esterification reactions from commercial reagents (Figure 7). The reaction of oligomeric propiolates and thiols in PBS afforded tough, flexible hydrogels as evidenced by no change to their storage modulus, as determined by rheological measurements, for up to 100% strain. However, the storage modulus was able to be controlled over 3 orders of magnitude (0.18−7 MPa) depending on the topology (three-arm vs four-arm) and the molecular weight of the precursors (1 kDa vs 4 kDa), which we hypothesize influences the topology and density of the network formed. Notably, a hydrogel composed of a 2 kDa four-armed propiolate and a 4 kDa two-armed thiol (PEG4 2A 2 4S ) displayed the highest compressive strength at 2.4 MPa. This value is particularly striking considering that the gels contained 10% solids content or 90% water and featured only a single network. We attribute this to the high efficiency and rapid nature of the coupling reaction enabling the formation of a highly controlled network with minimal loops or defects. A later study on PEG4 2A 2 4S thiol−yne hydrogels greatly advanced the functionality of the materials.
In another study, the degradation rate and swellability of the PEG thiol−yne hydrogels were effectively controlled. 59 While this was previously achieved by Truong et al. through replacing the PEG with a thermally responsive pluronic linker, 60 we chose to additionally combine three-and/or four-armed PEG precursor substrates to balance the swellability that results from the hydrophilic contribution of the PEG backbone through increasing the number of cross-linking sites in the network, as demonstrated by Kamata and co-workers in other hydrogel systems. 61,62 This afforded hydrogels which, after an initial shrinkage, remained largely unswollen over at least 30 days, which improved their mechanical resilience and allowed for tunable degradation rates. By extending this concept to allow for network functionalization in order to permit encapsulated cells to remodel the network, we also examined the limited introduction of two-arm dithiol precursors into a 3 + 3 network. 63 Following this development, a two-arm matrix metalloproteinase (MMP) degradable dithiol-functionalized linker was incorporated into the network. This study was also focused on the addition of CGRGDS proteins to increase the cell interactions with the synthetic matrix and promote cell viability, achieved through thiol−yne attachment from the cysteine residue with an off-stoichiometry gel. This adjustment provided an unexpected advantage by removing the initial shrinkage phase, most likely a result of a slight loosening of the network. As may be anticipated, the incorporation of peptide fragments further influenced the swelling profiles because of their hydrophilicity.
As an alternative method to increase hydrogel/cell interactivity in 3D, as well as to increase the sustainable content of the hydrogel materials, we created gels with interpenetrating hybrid networks formed from both a covalent thiol−yne PEG network and a noncovalent natural polysaccharide additive/ network. 64 Most notably, when the noncovalent network was formed from Ca/alginate, the hydrogels were less stiff (lower storage modulus) but had greater extensibility and ultimate tensile strength than the PEG-only single-network materials ( Figure 8). Moreover, the ionic nature of the Ca/alginate network led to the observation of self-healing properties in the networks.
In a 2021 report, we adapted our method for the stereocontrolled thiol−yne reaction 40 to synthesize hydrogels with tunable E/Z-alkene content to study cell mechanotransduction ( Figure 9). 3 Since the E/Z stereochemistry is dependent upon solvent polarity, we opted to use NEt 3 as a base catalyst but varied the solvent environment during network synthesis. Hydrogels with nearly 100% Z-alkene stereochemistry were obtained in PBS, and high-E organogels (10% Z) were obtained from chloroform. Acetone, which is miscible with both chloroform and water, was used as an intermediate-polarity solvent to access organogels with mixed stereochemistry (23, 51, and 82% Z-content). Importantly, the gel fraction values were greater than 90% for all samples, which indicates a similar fundamental gel structure among formulations. The mesh size of the gels was also very consistent and ranged only from 4.5 nm (10% E) to 6.7 nm (100% E).
The organogels were also easily transformed into hydrogels via gradual solvent switching in PBS. This afforded robust scaffolds that exhibited minimal swellability, which was also highly consistent among all formulations. Despite their similar physical properties, the stereochemistry of the gel dictated its mechanical properties. Most significantly, the hydrogels with high E-content (10% Z) were approximately 3 times stiffer than gels with high Z-content (up to 100% Z). This enabled them to be studied as substrate stiffness reporters, in which the stiffness of the hydrogel could be decoupled from the chemical and physical aspects of the material, allowing us to study cell mechanotransduction without influences from other external factors.

THIOL−ENE POLYMERS FROM STEREOCHEMICALLY DEFINED MONOMERS
Our stereoselective nucleophilic thiol−yne polymerizations afforded unsaturated polymers with approximately 30−80% Zcontent, 1,2 yet full stereocontrol remained elusive. We implemented a different strategy to obtain stereopure (100% E or Z) unsaturated polymers by employing monomers with predefined stereochemistry in conjunction with thiol−ene Michael addition. Previous work on creating unsaturated polymers from stereopure monomers tended to rely on using inefficient, high-temperature polycondensations, which can result in Z to E isomerization. 65,66 In turn, this led to imperfect control over polymer properties, such as crystallinity, and the obfuscation of structure−property relationships. Milder, isomerization-free polycondensations of maleic anhydride yielded only low-molecular-weight polymers (M w < 25 kDa). 67−69 A chaingrowth ring-opening polymerization of maleic anhydride afforded Z-isomer polyesters that were also thermally isomerized to E-isomers, but again, typically the molecular weights of the polymers that resulted were still limited to M w < 30 kDa. 70 We devised a one-step method to afford stereopure alkenecontaining diacrylate monomers, which were suitable for a mild thiol−ene click polymerization ( Figure 10). 71 We selected acrylates as Michael acceptors, rather than the more active maleimides, 72,73 due to a 2018 study by Long and co-workers that showed that high-molar-mass polyesters (up to 70 kDa M w ) could be obtained from the nucleophilic thiol−ene step-growth  polymerization of acrylates. 74 The absolute control of alkene stereochemistry (0−100% E-content) in the polymer backbone was demonstrated by modulating the E/Z double-bond content with the monomer feed. Undesirable isomerization was mitigated, especially for the high-Z polymers (C 100 ), as a result of the mild conditions under which the click polymerization was conducted. High-molecular-weight (M w = 103−250 kDa) poly(ester-urethanes) were isolated after reacting for 2 h at ambient temperature (Figure 10a). Dimethylphenylphoshine (DMPP) was found to be a highly active polymerization catalyst, as previously shown by Lowe and Bowman in small-molecule studies, 75 but we have also found DBU to have a similar level of activity in related thiol−ene polymerizations.
Moreover, we designed monomers that featured internal urethane moieties by reacting alcohol precursors with commercially available 2-isocyanatoethyl acrylate ( Figure  10a). We anticipated that the poly(ester-urethane)s would display enhanced mechanical properties as compared to all polyester variants (synthesized only from acrylates) due to strong hydrogen-bonding interactions of the urethanes. This key design feature would again be exploited in some of our later studies. Both 100% E-and 100% Z-polymers (T 100 and C 100 ) as well as a saturated analogue (S100) were all semicrystalline thermoplastics with good mechanical properties. The Epolymer and saturated polymer displayed sharp melt transitions at 75 and 90°C, respectively (Figure 10b). However, the Z-alkene polymer possessed a complex melt profile centered around 50°C , in addition to a decreased total enthalpy of melting (ΔH m ). These thermal differences were manifested in their mechanical properties where the Z-polymer was softer, weaker, but more extensible than either the saturated or E-polymer (Figure 10c,d). The simple polymerization method allowed us to precisely make polymers of mixed stereochemistry to access intermediate properties between the two stereopure samples. In a later study, we employed the same E-and Z-alkene monomers to synthesize stereopure telechelic oligomers with molar masses ranging from 4 to 10 kDa. 76 Importantly, the oligomers possessed acrylate end-groups as the stoichiometry of the acrylate monomer to thiol was biased. The alkene-containing oligomers were then orthogonally cross-linked into networks via acrylate photopolymerization. The backbone alkenes were unreactive under these conditions, and equally, no photoisomerization was observed. Thus, we were able to formulate 3D-printed soft elastomers (Z-isomers) or stiff plastics (E-isomers) which also possessed degradation rates that differed according to stereochemistry.
We have also investigated click step-growth polymerizations for monomers possessing geometric isomerism that is induced by planar rigidity imparted by ring units. We employed a similar strategy to build polyester diastereomers from diacrylate Z or E cyclopropane monomers. 77 Surprisingly, both Z-and Epolymers were amorphous with low T g 's (Z = −47°C; E = −52°C). In comparison, a polyester obtained from 1,4butanediol (i.e., without a rigid ring in the backbone) was semicrystalline. Even though the isomeric cyclopropane polymers were both amorphous, the incorporation of a small number of cyclopropane units (via copolymerization) into a semicrystalline polymer afforded rational control of the bulk crystallinity, which had a knock-on effect on the mechanical properties, allowing for the manipulation of strength and stiffness.
Building on the cyclopropane work, we turned our attention to renewable cyclic building blocks. Rigid-ring bicyclic ethers that are produced from the dehydrative cyclization of sugar alcohols have been widely explored in polymer chemistry because of their unique structures, which offer planar geometric isomerism and inherent degradability. 78−80 The most prevalent cyclic unit is the glucose-derived isosorbide, with the

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pubs.acs.org/accounts Article accompanying diastereomers, isomannide and isoidide, being less studied. Many isohexide-based polymers, with the exception of multiblock architectures, are brittle (high-T g ) plastics as a consequence of the incorporation of the rigid ring in the polymer backbone. 78−81 Some notable exceptions are low-T g (below ambient temperature) thermoplastic elastomer polyethers 82 or polyesters 83−85 from Reineke and co-workers; however, the best material properties (i.e., high strength and extensibility) were observed for copolymers that also incorporated a complementary dilactone monomer. Nevertheless, these works by Reineke and co-workers inspired our attempts to build high-molecular-weight isohexide-containing polymers using the nucleophilic thiol−ene polymerization. 4,86 Since each isohexide features fused tetrahydrofuranyl rings with two hydroxyl substituents in endo or exo conformations (isosorbide − endo/exo; isomannide − endo/ endo; and isoidide − exo/exo), the same monomer strategy used to synthesize urethane-acrylate monomers from simple diols 71 was conveniently applied to all three isohexide diastereomers. Thus, each monomer contained a rigid-bicyclic core (stereopure isohexide) with flanking internal urethane groups and reactive acrylate groups with which to build molar mass through phosphine-catalyzed thiol−ene step-growth polymerization ( Figure 11). In each case, with a commercial dithiol, highmolecular-weight (typically M w > 100 kDa) linear poly(esterurethanes) were readily obtained ( Figure 11). 4,86 It was immediately clear that the stereochemistry of the isohexide was dictating the thermomechanical properties and physical behavior of the polymers. Molecular weight and/or dispersity differences were also ruled out as factors in producing the dissimilar performance among the polymers. Moreover, irrespective of stereochemistry, the isohexide polymers displayed outstanding mechanical performance which was beyond that of many leading commercial materials.
Both ISPU and IMPU polymers formed amorphous materials of high optical transparency that behaved as tough elastomers with high tensile strength (ISPU = 75 MPa; IMPU = 63.5 MPa) and elongation at break (ISPU = 1466%; IMPU = 1806%). 86 These mechanical properties are beyond those of conventional thermoplastic elastomers and even covalently cross-linked rubbers. Furthermore, each elastomer featured a "J-shaped" tensile curve with three discrete elastic regimes and a significant strain-hardening phase in the third region. The stereochemistry of the isohexide also impacted the elastic recovery of each material. Across all three elastic regimes and regardless of the deformation rate, IMPU recovered more slowly than ISPU. Molecular dynamics simulations provided insight into these differences and revealed that this was driven by the evolution of the hydrogen-bonding network.
Importantly, X-ray scattering data revealed that the strain hardening was not due to strain-induced crystallization. Thus, we posited that the materials were transiently cross-linking by a dynamic hydrogen-bonding network, and this was confirmed by mechanical testing at different strain rates. To further understand the structural features that were responsible for the behavior, two additional polymers were synthesized and compared to ISPU to illustrate the importance of having both the urethane moiety and the rigid isohexide unit in the polymer backbone ( Figure 12). When the isosorbide was replaced with 1,4-butanediol, the resultant polymer (SAT-PU) was a semicrystalline plastic with good tensile strength, though it was still noticeably weaker than ISPU. This finding was consistent with our previous study. 71 Conversely, removal of the urethane linkage afforded an isosorbide-based polyester (ISNU) that was also semicrystalline yet much weaker (tensile strength of up to 10.8 MPa). Thus, the combination of the rigid sugar moiety with strong-hydrogen-bonding urethane was critical to the formation of extremely tough and elastic materials (i.e., pronounced strainhardening without crystallization).
In sharp contrast to the elastomeric nature of the isosorbide and isomannide isomers, the isoidide (exo/exo) polymer (IIPU) displayed distinctly different behavior with a clear yield point,

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Article which is a hallmark of plastic deformation behavior (Figure 13a). In fact, the stiffness (Young's modulus = 320 MPa) and ductility (elongation at break near 1000%) of IIPU were comparable to those of commodity thermoplastics such as high-density polyethylene. However, IIPU also possessed a high tensile strength of 56 MPa, which is more similar to that of an engineering plastic such as nylon. The thermal properties of IIPU (Figure 13b) showed it to be semicrystalline (T m = 140°C ). A prevailing dogma in polymer design is that stereochemistry can incrementally change properties (i.e., make a weak plastic stronger, stiffer, or more ductile) but cannot change baseline behavior. However, here opposing mechanical behavior (elastic vs plastic) was observed between isomeric polymers. To shed light on this behavior, we again turned to molecular dynamic simulations to model hydrogen-bonding interactions under deformation. IIPU was found to possess about 50% more total hydrogen bonds than IMPU. IIPU chains also revealed a preference to favor intermolecular hydrogen bonds. Together, these observations may suggest a pathway by which IIPU samples can crystallize. Thus, the opposing material behavior was manifested by acute differences in hydrogen bonding (intravs interchain interactions), which was driven by the stereochemistry of the isohexide.
Since IMPU and IIPU were produced from isomeric monomers, isoidide and isomannide were easily co-incorporated into materials either as statistical copolymers or from blended homopolymers despite their contrasting thermomechanical properties. The consequence of this exceptional compatibility was significant as it allowed for independent tuning, or decoupling, of the degradation rate from mechanical properties (Figure 14a,b). This simple strategy demonstrates a viable path to materials with on-demand property tuning via stereochemical manipulation. These results were also striking since the degradation rates did not follow crystallinity trends. Despite the blend and copolymer materials having the same composition (50/50 isoidide/isomannide), the blended sample was fastdegrading yet semicrystalline while the copolymer was relatively slow-degrading yet amorphous. We observed evidence of phase separation using atomic force microscopy (AFM), which was backed up by molecular dynamics simulations, to reveal that the blended sample was less homogeneous than the copolymer and possessed larger domains of isoidide-and isomannide-rich regions, likely contributing to differences in their respective degradation rates. In effect, the phase separation and larger IIPU domains likely facilitated crystallization and contributed to the plastic behavior of the blended sample. Despite their phase separation and enhanced degradability, the blended samples

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pubs.acs.org/accounts Article were strong plastics (even for other ratios of IIPU and IMPU), signaling potential application for mechanical recycling of mixed polymer feeds.

SUMMARY AND OUTLOOK
Click step-growth polymerization methods are attractive and, increasingly, practical alternatives to conventional polycondensation reactions. In particular, the thiol−yne/−ene Michael reaction is a straightforward technique for producing highmolecular-weight step-growth polymers in an exceedingly efficient manner. The reactions can be conducted at ambient temperature, in open air, and using only catalytic amounts of common amines or phosphines. Beyond the green reaction metrics, the reactions provide access to polymeric structures of diverse composition or functionality (including polyesters and polyamides, among others) due to the accessibility of different Michael acceptor monomers and commercial dithiols combined with excellent functional group tolerance. Click step-growth polymerizations can also be effectively used to create stereocontrolled polymer architectures, many of which are unfeasible to attain when using conventional polycondensation methods. With simple reaction modifications, the thiol−yne Michael polymerization produces materials with well-defined E/ Z-isomerism (ca. 30−80% Z-content) along the polymer backbone. On the other hand, the thiol−ene Michael polymerization can be used to produce stereopure (100% E or Z) unsaturated polymers from monomers with predefined stereochemistry. Many of the polymers (and hydrogels) that we showcased in this Account exhibit outstanding mechanical performance, from strong plastics to tough elastomers, which can also be exquisitely tailored according to the stereochemistry of the polymers. Due to the exceptional compatibility of the isomeric monomers and polymers, there are opportunities to create a large range of materials from a small monomer pool via simple copolymerization or blending strategies.
Combining the use of renewable feedstocks with efficient synthetic methods and green chemistry principles 87 is imperative to achieving truly sustainable polymers with minimal environmental impact. However, bringing together green chemistry methodology and sustainable starting materials without compromising performance is an enduring challenge in polymer synthesis. Yet in this Account, we have demonstrated that renewable diols can be efficiently transformed, often in one synthetic step, into highly active monomers for thiol−yne/−ene click polymerization. The resultant polymers that contain degradable motifs displayed uncompromised mechanical performance that makes them competitive with, or even superior to, many existing commodity plastics and elastomers.
Despite our contributions and other advances in the field, we propose several innovation areas to unlock the full potential of thiol−yne/−ene click polymerizations and click polymerizations more generally: I. Increase the stereoselectivity of the thiol−yne reaction to further tailor polymer performance.
II. Replace chlorinated polymerization solvents with greener alternative solvents or processes.
III. Identify additional sustainable monomer feedstock to replace non-sustainably derived components in the polymers, including dithiols, urethanes, and acrylates.
IV. Improve the microstructural control of the polymer backbone, such as sequence-specific stereoblocks, to reclaim advantages associated with chain-growth polymerization methods. V. Design closed-loop chemically recyclable click polymers. The manuscript was written through the contributions of J.C.W. and A.P.D. All authors have edited and given approval to the final version of the manuscript. CRediT: Joshua C Worch conceptualization (supporting), writing-original draft (lead), writing-review & editing (equal); Andrew P. Dove conceptualization (lead), writing-original draft (supporting), writingreview & editing (equal).

Notes
The authors declare the following competing financial interest(s): A.P.D. is named as an inventor of a patent application based on the thiol-yne nucleophilic addition work; both J.C.W. and A.P.D. are named as inventors of a provisional patent application based on the isohexide polymer work.
professor of sustainable polymer chemistry. His group's research focuses on the development and application of sustainable polymers and degradable polymeric biomaterials.

■ ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We extend our thanks to all current and former group members who have contributed to this research area. We are also hugely grateful for the global collaborations for their contributions to this work, with special mention to Prof. Matthew L. Becker at Duke University for extensive collaboration on some key aspects of the work presented in this Account.